Self-Assembled Liposomes Enhance Electron Transfer for Efficient Photocatalytic CO2 Reduction

Light-driven conversion of CO2 to chemicals provides a sustainable alternative to fossil fuels, but homogeneous systems are typically limited by cross reactivity between different redox half reactions and inefficient charge separation. Herein, we present the bioinspired development of amphiphilic photosensitizer and catalyst pairs that self-assemble in lipid membranes to overcome some of these limitations and enable photocatalytic CO2 reduction in liposomes using precious metal-free catalysts. Using sodium ascorbate as a sacrificial electron source, a membrane-anchored alkylated cobalt porphyrin demonstrates higher catalytic CO production (1456 vs 312 turnovers) and selectivity (77 vs 11%) compared to its water-soluble nonalkylated counterpart. Time-resolved and steady-state spectroscopy revealed that self-assembly facilitates this performance enhancement by enabling a charge-separation state lifetime increase of up to two orders of magnitude in the dye while allowing for a ninefold faster electron transfer to the catalyst. Spectroelectrochemistry and density functional theory calculations of the alkylated Co porphyrin catalyst support a four-electron-charging mechanism that activates the catalyst prior to catalysis, together with key catalytic intermediates. Our molecular liposome system therefore benefits from membrane immobilization and provides a versatile and efficient platform for photocatalysis.


■ INTRODUCTION
The sunlight-driven reduction of CO 2 to value-added products is a promising and sustainable path to mitigate anthropogenic CO 2 emissions and produce renewable platform chemicals. The use of lipid membranes such as liposomes as artificial photosynthetic scaffolds is an elegant and bioinspired approach to design photosynthetic systems. 1 These synthetic liposomes can self-assemble into biomimetics of thylakoid membranes while allowing tunability of their supramolecular and photocatalytic components. Crucially, they facilitate charge separation 2−4 and can spatially separate (compartmentalize) redox half reactions, 5,6 thereby avoiding cross reactivity (such as back reactions and charge recombination) 7−10 that severely limits homogeneous photocatalysis. 1,11 Liposomes have been explored as scaffolds for different photochemical processes, including charge separation dynamics across lipid membranes 5,7,9,12,13 and molecule-based photocatalytic systems for water oxidation and reduction. 14−17 More recently, full water splitting was reported using liposomes embedded with photocatalytic metal organic frameworks. 6 However, CO 2 photoreduction liposome systems remain scarce, 18,19 and understanding has been limiting, hence preventing further development. The previously reported examples utilized a membrane-bound ruthenium tris-bipyridine dye and Lehn-type rhenium bipyridine catalyst, which generated moderate amounts of CO under visible light irradiation (CO turnover number [TON CO ] = 190 after 15 h 18 and 15 after 3 h 19 ). In comparison, the library of homogeneous CO 2 photocatalytic systems is extensive, and earth-abundant catalysts based on terpyridine and porphyrin ligand families display high catalytic activity and product selectivity under aqueous conditions. 20−25 Herein, we exploit the tunability of molecular catalysts to synthesize alkylated CO 2 reduction catalysts to self-assemble with alkylated photosensitizers in liposome membranes. These new catalysts are based on state-of-the-art homogeneous catalysts, 20,21 with modified ligand scaffolds. The beneficial effects of self-assembly and flexibility of the approach, 1 which enable facile variation of active sites in the liposomes, are demonstrated by a series of new alkylated precious metal-free catalysts based on terpyridine and porphyrin ligands ( Figure  1A). Photocatalysis results comparing the performance between alkylated catalysts and water-soluble catalyst analogues are provided, and time-resolved/steady-state emission (photoluminescence) and transient absorption spectroscopies are utilized to determine the beneficial effects of self-assembly on charge separation. These techniques provide unprecedented insights into the photoinduced charge-transfer dynamics at the water−membrane interfaces. Key interactions between the sacrificial electron donor sodium ascorbate (NaHAsc), membrane-bound [Ru(bipyridine) 3 ] 2+ -type photosensitizer, and catalyst molecules are examined to explain the superior photocatalytic activity of liposomes compared to their homogeneous analogues. Furthermore, the most active catalyst, 5,10,15,20-(tetra-N-hexadecyl-4-pyridinium)porphyrin cobalt(II) (CoP L ), is comprehensively studied on transparent electrodes using in situ UV−vis−NIR and resonance Raman spectroelectrochemistry to understand its catalytic behavior, an approach that still remains scarce. 26 −32 In combination with density functional theory (DFT), these methods reveal important reaction intermediates during CO 2 reduction and an unusual precatalytic four-electron charging mechanism that precedes its catalytic activity.

■ RESULTS AND DISCUSSION
Synthesis and Assembly of Photocatalytic Liposomes. The tunability of molecular catalysts allows the periphery of the catalyst to be functionalized for self-assembly while maintaining a functional catalytically active site. The 3d transition metal complexes of Fe, Co, and Ni have emerged as active CO 2 reduction catalysts with terpyridine 20,23,33 and porphyrin 21,24 ligands (hereinafter denoted as T and P, respectively), with no reports yet implementing them in selfassembled photocatalytic CO 2 reduction liposome systems. To increase their lipophilicity and facilitate assembly at the water− membrane interface in the liposomes, hexadecyl chains were introduced into the ligands to prepare a systematic series (denoted as MT L and MP L , where L = lipophilic, W = watersoluble, and M = Co, Ni, Fe; Figure 1). 1  The UV−vis spectra and cyclic voltammograms (CVs) are comparable for the alkylated and water-soluble analogues in all cases, including the photosensitizers (Figures 2A,B and S5− S15), which indicates that the catalytically active site remains largely unchanged. Focusing on the most active catalysts CoP L and CoP W (see below), analogous absorption features are observed by UV−vis spectroscopy in acetone ( Figure 2A, Soret bands: ε 426nm = 1.07 × 10 5 and ε 423nm 1.05 × 10 5 M −1 cm −1 , respectively), as well as analogous electrochemical response. The CV of CoP L in N 2 -and CO 2 -saturated dimethylformamide (DMF) shows five reversible redox processes centered at −0.82, −0.99, −1.20, −1.38, and −1.49 V vs Fc 0/+ ( Figure  2B). 21,34 The first two processes correspond to the same metalcentered single-electron reduction process (Co II/I ), possibly due to different electroactive environments created by the (de)coordination of DMF molecules and the different arrangement of the long alkyl tails in solution. 34 The other three redox waves are assigned based on the literature to a oneelectron porphyrin-centered single-electron reduction (P W 0/− ) and two pyridinium-centered two-electron reductions (Table  S1). 21,34 Integration of the square wave voltammetry (SWV) scans of CoP L and CoP W and comparison of the relative ratios between the charge passed during chronoamperometry measurements in DMF confirm that both molecules can store up to six electrons (Figure S16 and Tables S2 and S3).
extrusion (see the Supplementary Methods section). [14][15][16]35 The first lipid is 1,2-dimyristoyl-sn-glycero-3-phosphocholine (DMPC), which is a zwitterionic lipid at neutral pH, has a transition-phase temperature of 24°C, and is used to form the bulk of the membrane bilayers. The second lipid, 1,2distearoyl-sn-glycero-3-phosphoethanolamine-N-[methoxy-   (polyethylene glycol)-2000] (NaDSPE-PEG2K), is an anionic and bulky lipid used as a dopant (<1% mol). The use of NaDSPE-PEG2K has a twofold benefit as electrostatic attraction improves immobilization of the positively charged molecular components, whereas its long methoxy polyethylene groups help diminish liposome aggregation. 1 Dynamic light scattering measurements showed that extruded liposomes have average diameters of 149 ± 11 nm in 0.1 M NaHCO 3 and 127 ± 9 nm in 0.1 M NaH 2 PO 4 and 0.1 M NaHAsc (Tables S4−  S6). These sizes are consistent with Cryo-TEM ( Figure 2C). Dynamic light scattering also showed that liposome size, with and without dye and catalyst molecules, is not affected after 4 h of visible light irradiation (<10% size variation), which highlights the photostability of the lipids under our experimental conditions. Furthermore, initial screening of molecule-containing liposomes fabricated with DMPC and two different lipids, i.e., 1,2-dilauroyl-sn-glycero-3-phosphocholine and 1,2-dipalmitoylsn-glycero-3-phosphocholine, showed that all three doped liposomes were in the fluid liquid crystal phase at room temperature, possibly due to the presence of 10% RuPS L ( Figure S17). Importantly, DMPC-based liposomes exhibited better catalytic activity and electron transfer kinetics than the other two; hence, we selected DMPC as the main liposome building block thereafter (see Supplementary Note 1).
Photocatalytic CO 2 Reduction in Liposomes. The photocatalytic activity of liposomes was assessed in CO 2saturated aqueous NaHCO 3 buffer solution (25°C) containing sodium ascorbate (NaHAsc) as a sacrificial electron donor (pH ≈ 6.7) under visible light irradiation from a solar light simulator (AM 1.5G, 100 mW cm −2 , λ > 400 nm UV filter, IR water filter) ( Figures S18−25). The photosensitizer is a single electron donor; therefore, photocatalytic tests employ an excess of photosensitizer to drive the 2e − reduction of CO 2 to CO. During catalyst screening, a 20:1 photosensitizer to catalyst ratio was used to minimize electron transfer limitations and allow the nature of the catalysts to limit system performance.
CO evolved as the major photocatalytic CO 2 reduction product from all six alkylated catalysts ( Figures 1A and 2D) and was analyzed by gas chromatography (GC), with moderate-to-high CO selectivity (62% for NiP L and 74−87% for all others; Tables 1, S7, and S8). H 2 was a byproduct, and no other products were detected after 4 h of photocatalysis (such as methane using GC or formate using nuclear magnetic resonance (NMR) and ion chromatography). In contrast, analogous homogeneous systems containing water-soluble photosensitizer RuPS W and catalysts (MP W or MT W ) produce lower amounts of CO and, in most cases, higher amounts of H 2 under the same experimental conditions ( Figure 2E, Tables 1, S8, and S9). This is exemplified by comparing CoP L in liposomes with its homogeneous analogue CoP W , reported previously, 21 as CoP L shows more catalytic turnovers (TON CO = 189 ± 8 vs 65 ± 1) and a higher CO formation rate (89 ± 18 vs 24 ± 1 nmol CO h −1 ) under the same experimental conditions. This difference in performance can be ascribed to diffusion limitations for the homogeneous system, such as slower electron transfer kinetics between RuPS W and catalysts (see below). 3,4,18 This can be probed indirectly by varying the catalyst concentration, with CoP L -containing liposomes being more active and CO selective at all concentrations (20−500 nM) with a directly proportional relationship between CO formation and CoP L concentration ( Figure 2F). At 20 nM catalyst concentration, CoP L reaches a TON CO of 735 ± 91 and CO selectivity of 78%, compared to a TON CO of 529 ± 3 and CO selectivity of 58% for CoP W .
Exchanging the CO 2 -saturated 0.1 M buffer from NaHCO 3 to NaH 2 PO 4 (pH ≈ 6.7 vs 6.3) provides a higher buffering capacity and minimizes proton gradients near the twodimensional water−membrane interface. 36 This change increases the rate of CO production for CoP L at varying catalyst concentrations while also maintaining high CO selectivity ( Figure 2F). This leads to a TON CO of 1456 ± 36 and CO selectivity of 77% for CoP L at 20 nM, compared to 312 ± 22 and 11% for CoP W . These results exceed previously reported Re(bipyridine)-based liposome systems, 18,19 and match top performing homogeneous photocatalytic CO 2 reduction systems in aqueous conditions (Table S10).
Exclusion control experiments for the CoP L system confirm that no gaseous products evolve in the absence of RuPS L , NaHAsc, or light irradiation (Table 1 for details). Photocatalysis with isotopically labeled 13 CO 2 shows the formation of 13 CO as the only photocatalytic CO 2 reduction product, which confirms that CO is produced from CO 2 ( Figure S26). The rate of CO formation in all cases decays over time, which can be attributed to the photodegradation of RuPS L during light irradiation. This hypothesis is confirmed by electronic absorption spectroscopy showing that after light irradiation in liposomes, containing both RuPS L and an alkylated catalyst, the 450 nm band belonging to RuPS L decreases in intensity irreversibly over time. This is in contrast to liposomes containing only CoP L , where the Soret band intensity does not diminish ( Figure S27), consistent with previous reports. 15,37−39 Additionally, while 0.1 M NaHAsc was chosen as the optimal concentration to obtain a high CO evolution rate and CO selectivity, variation of NaHAsc concentration (50−400 mM), as well as visible light intensity (20−100%), shows that CO and H 2 formation is affected by both variables (Tables S11 and S12), confirming that formation of reduced RuPS L − species is limiting the overall reaction of the studied liposomes.
Photoinduced Charge Transfer in Liposomes. To determine the effects of membrane self-assembly on electron transfer steps, time-resolved and steady-state emission quenching studies (Stern−Volmer analysis) were carried out with water-soluble and lipophilic photosensitizers (i.e., RuPS W or RuPS L ) ( Figure S28). In both cases, [Ru II (bpy) 3 ] 2+ is photoexcited and reductively quenched by NaHAsc to form [Ru II (bpy) 2 (bpy ·− )] + , with the photoluminescence intensity of photoexcited Ru(II) being dependent on the quenching rate. 40 Examining homogeneous RuPS W , the quenching occurs by diffusional encounter with NaHAsc, as observed with indistinguishable steady-state and time-resolved Stern−Volmer plots (i.e., I 0 /I and τ 0 /τ as a function of [NaHAsc] in Figure  3A; bimolecular quenching rate constant k q = 3.7 × 10 7 M −1 s −1 ). In contrast, while the emission intensity is strongly decreased by increasing the concentration of NaHAsc, it does not have an obvious effect on the emission lifetime of RuPS L in liposomes ( Figure 3B). This can be attributed to a high local concentration of HAsc − , which is electrostatically attracted to the charge-dense liposome membranes loaded with cationic RuPS L (coulombic association-driven static quenching with an association constant K A of 31 M −1 ). This is further supported by comparing the quenching quantum efficiencies (   Figure S29). By contrast in homogeneous solution, methyl viologen shows a rate constant k q ≈ 1.0 × 10 9 M −1 s −1 with excited [Ru II (bpy) 3 ] 2+ , which is twenty-seven-fold larger than that of NaHAsc. Immobilizing complexes in liposomes increases their local concentration, which may increase the rate of self-quenching processes of RuPS L . 1 This was examined by monitoring the phosphorescence decay rate at 600 and 650 nm in the absence of NaHAsc, which showed no difference for homogeneous RuPS W . In contrast, the decay for membrane-bound RuPS L was faster as the RuPS L concentration increased (DMPC/ RuPS L molar ratios of 10:1, 20:1, and 40:1 were studied; Figure S30). Data fitting of the emission trace at 650 nm indicated a short-lifetime component attributed to selfquenching by a neighboring ground-state RuPS L molecule (see Supplementary Note 2 and Table S14). The contribution of this self-quenching component to the overall rate is smaller at higher concentrations of DMPC. This indicates that diluting RuPS L in the liposomes hinders self-quenching events, presumably by spatially separating them. This emphasizes the importance of balancing higher photosensitizer concentrations to maximize light absorption against self-quenching processes. Photocatalysis results showed that higher concentrations of DMPC (more liposomes), with constant total concentrations of RuPS L and CoP L , had higher catalytic activity consistent with the above findings ( Figure S24 and Table S13).
Transient absorption spectroscopy (TAS) uses laser pulse excitation and measures the absorption of photogenerated species. This allows the lifetimes of the photoexcited [Ru I II (bpy) 2 (bpy · − )] 2+ * and reductively quenched [Ru II (bpy) 2 (bpy ·− )] + (RuPS − ) to be compared in homogeneous solution and within liposomes. 41 Reductive quenching of the photoexcited state by NaHAsc forms the formal RuPS − , which absorbs at 500 nm. RuPS − has a reduction potential of ≈−1.2 V vs SHE in 0.1 M NaHCO 3 , 22 which provides enough driving force to reduce the catalysts. The conversion of RuPS to RuPS − (i.e., charge separation quantum yield or φ ET ) is higher in homogeneous conditions than in liposomes (35 vs 6%) and may be ascribed to the charged liposome membranes. While liposomes favor static quenching (see above), they also hinder diffusion of oxidized ascorbate species and thereby lower their solvent-cage escape yield ( Figure S31 and Supplementary Note 3). In contrast, the decay of RuPS − is far slower in liposomes than in homogeneous solution, with a substantial absorbance value remaining even 500 μs after the excitation pulse ( Figure 3C). While the homogeneous RuPS W − decay is approximately single exponential (26 μs time constant), RuPS L − is strongly biphasic ( Figure S32), with one phase similar to that in homogeneous solution (110 μs time constant, 23% contribution) and one much slower, which represents the majority of RuPS L − (2.4 ms time constant, 77% contribution). A tentative assignment is that the fast phase is the rapid recombination of immobilized RuPS L − and oxidized ascorbate molecules remaining near the reaction site at the same liposome, possibly at the interior liposome interface, while the slower recombination is between RuPS L − species and oxidized ascorbate molecules that have escaped into the bulk   (Figures S34 and S35). In liposomes, all six alkylated catalysts Journal of the American Chemical Society pubs.acs.org/JACS Article accelerate the decay of the RuPS L − species, which is a solid indicator of electron transfer occurring from RuPS L − to the catalysts in close proximity ( Figures 3E, S36, and S37). Exemplifying the beneficial forward electron transfer kinetics of membrane-bound species over homogeneous systems, the bimolecular electron transfer rate constant k ET of membranebound NiT L is nine times faster than that of the homogeneous system NiT W (2.0 × 10 10 vs 2.2 × 10 9 M −1 s −1 ; Figure S38). This enables a comparable electron transfer yield for 5 μM NiT L in liposomes and 100 μM NiT W in homogeneous solution (ca. 80% in both cases; see Table S14 and Supplementary Note 5 for details). Notably, the k ET of CoP W (1.3 × 10 10 M −1 s −1 ) is six times faster than that of NiT W and highlights the larger driving force to reduce CoP W compared to NiT W .
Taken together, these findings (summarized in Figure 3F) show that self-assembly of the membrane-bound species strongly affects reductive quenching and self-quenching dynamics. They can also increase charge separation and recombination lifetimes. Crucially, despite the lower φ ET of liposomes, the relatively high surface concentration of membrane-bound species in liposomes diminishes diffusion limitations that hinder homogeneous systems. This is due to shorter electron transfer distances between photosensitizers and catalysts, which greatly assists catalysis. 1,15 Mechanistic Studies of CoP L -Mediated CO 2 Reduction. The high catalytic activity of CoP L prompted an investigation into its catalytic mechanism. The hydrophobic nature of its alkyl tails enables it to be immobilized via physisorption onto conductive supports such as transparent fluorine-doped tin oxide (FTO) or glassy carbon electrodes (GCE) after dropcasting. This allowed a mechanistic study coupling its electrochemical response to spectroelectrochemical (SEC) UV−vis and Raman spectroscopies. The results were rationalized by DFT calculations to examine the molecular changes that CoP L undergoes during CO 2 reduction.
The SWV of FTO|CoP L in CO 2 -saturated 0.1 M NaHCO 3 displays two reduction waves appearing at −0.1 and −0.35 V vs SHE ( Figure 4A), which are assigned to a first metal-centered one-electron process and then a ligand-centered three-electron process (Table S3). FTO|CoP L and GCE|CoP L presented a catalytic CO 2 reduction wave with an onset potential (E onset ) at −0.9 V, and CO is detected by GC after chronoamperometry at −0.9 V (0.07 and 0.16 μmol CO cm −2 , respectively), ( Figure S39 and Table S15). In contrast, the equivalent blank chronoamperometry experiments using bare FTO and GCE evolved 0.01 and 0 μmol CO cm −2 , respectively. For comparison, the immobilized catalyst shows similar redox processes and catalytic onset to CoP W . 21,24 Chronoamperometry measurements at −0.9 V of the other five alkylated catalysts (MP L and MT L ) on GCE reveal that they are less active and CO selective than CoP L ( Figure S39C), indicating that CoP L has the lowest overpotential (η ≃ 0.37 V) to reduce CO 2 of all six alkylated catalysts, which supports the trend observed in photocatalysis.
UV−vis−NIR SEC of FTO|CoP L compared changes in N 2and CO 2 -saturated 0.1 M NaHCO 3 (pH 8.0 and 6.7, respectively) with chronoamperometric potential steps from +0.7 to −0.9 V vs SHE. The pH difference between N 2 -and CO 2 -saturated 0.1 M NaHCO 3 solutions is caused by the hydration of CO 2 to form carbonic acid. 36 At +0.7 V, the complex is in the Co(II) state and features a Soret band at 415 nm and Q-band absorption at 535 and 670 nm ( Figure 4B,C). The Soret band decreases in intensity as Co(II) is reduced to Co(I), 34 starting at 0.0 V in N 2 and −0.1 V in CO 2 , with complete reduction at −0.7 V in both N 2 and CO 2 ( Figure  4D). This is consistent with our SWV and TAS, and the Soret band bleaching may correspond to formation of cobalt hydride species (Co−H) under N 2 , or binding of CO 2 under CO 2 saturation. 42 Concurrent with Co II/I reduction, the absorption bands at 510 and 575 nm become more intense (Figure S40), indicating reduction of the porphyrin ligand. 34 Additionally, a new absorption at 860 nm grows in intensity from −0.3 to −0.7 V and is assigned to the reduction of two hexadecyl-Npyridinium rings, in agreement with our SWV results and the literature. 21,34,43 There are negligible absorption changes at 860 nm from −0.7 to −0.9 V, indicating that the remaining two hexadecyl-N-pyridinium rings are not reduced, even under catalytic conditions. Therefore, this analysis indicates a fourelectron reduction that activates the cobalt porphyrin prior to catalysis in water (see below), in contrast to the six-electron reduction of homogeneous CoP L previously observed in DMF, which is not catalytically active (Figures 2B and S13 and Supplementary Note 6 with associated Figure S41 for further discussion).
Raman SEC on FTO|CoP L was performed analogously to UV−vis SEC and interpreted as difference spectra obtained by subtracting the oxidized species spectrum (+0.7 V) from each spectrum ( Figure 5A,B). Thereby, reduction of the porphyrin ring is observed below −0.3 V under N 2 and CO 2 consistent with SWV and UV−vis−NIR SEC results ( Figures S42 and  S43), specifically changes to peaks at 1007 and 1599 cm −1 , ascribed to stretching and bending modes of pyrrole rings (C α −C β , C β −C β , and C α −N) and methine bridge (C α −C m ) within the porphyrin core ligand, 45 and between 1300 and 1500 cm −1 arising from CH 2 twisting and CH 3 bending modes from the alkyl tails (Table S16). 46 Further reduction of the CoP L films from −0.5 to −0.7 V in N 2 and CO 2 induces the concomitant appearance of new and more intense bands (especially in the case of CO 2 ) at 1192, 1212, and 1634 cm −1 that are ascribed to bending and stretching modes of C−C, C− N + , and N + −CH 2 in the alkylated pyridinium rings. 45,47 This corresponds to the increase in absorption at 860 nm attributed to reduced pyridinium rings. Importantly, applying −0.9 V induces no further spectral changes, highlighting that no more than two pyridinium rings of the CoP L molecules are reduced after −0.7 V, which is consistent with our SEC results and the literature. 47 Furthermore, monitoring potential-dependent Raman intensities at 1599 and 1007 cm −1 for an oxidized and a reduced species, respectively, reproduces the trend observed in Figure 5B ( Figure S44 and Table S17).
Having identified at least two species with distinct charge by Raman SEC, DFT calculations were carried out to obtain simulated Raman spectra for possible reaction intermediates. DFT calculations were performed using CoP W as a simplified structural model (CoP hereinafter) with various charges (+5 to −2) with and without several coadsorbed ligands (CO, CO 2 , COOH, H 2 O, and H). Results confirm that the cobalt oxidation state largely influences the Raman spectrum, whereas the axial ligands (other than CO 2 ) result in minimal changes (Supplementary Note 7 and Figures S45−S48). Crucially, the DFT-calculated Raman spectra for the unreduced (  Figure 5C,D). This indicates that CoP L molecules can store up to four electrons, in agreement with SWV and UV−vis−NIR SEC. We hence propose a catalytic cycle for CoP L immobilized on FTO ( Figure 5E). This catalytic mechanism proceeds via binding of CO 2

■ CONCLUSIONS
We report a systematic series of amphiphilic earth-abundant CO 2 reduction catalysts, which were designed to readily selfassemble into lipid membranes and form, together with an amphiphilic ruthenium dye, photocatalytic liposomes. The most active liposome system containing the 5,10,15,20-(tetra-N-hexadecyl-4-pyridinium)porphyrin cobalt(II) catalyst CoP L is more active than its water-soluble analogue, achieving a high TON CO (1456 after 4 h) with high CO selectivity (77%). The CoP L system thereby exceeds previously reported benchmarks in CO 2 photoreduction in liposome and homogeneous systems, highlighting the beneficial effect on the activity and product selectivity when immobilizing molecular catalysts onto two-dimensional lipid bilayer surfaces. Time-resolved and steady-state spectroscopies provided unprecedented insights into the origin of the higher activity of liposome-bound molecular systems. Results revealed that self-assembled dyes have a 4−100 times longer charge separation state lifetime, and display a ninefold faster electron transfer to self-assembled catalysts compared to homogeneous analogues. Two-dimensional charged membranes diminish diffusion limitations between ascorbate and self-assembled photosensitizers due to electrostatic attraction, and despite lowering φ ET , they increase the reduced photosensitizer lifetime. Membrane immobilization also leads to a higher relative surface concentration of membrane-bound species. This shortens the electron transfer distance between photosensitizers and catalysts, thereby resulting in enhanced catalytic activity. Furthermore, the superior catalytic activity of CoP L was examined to show that it undergoes a four-electron activation mechanism before catalytic turnover with key intermediates being determined by DFT calculations. The proposed multielectron activation mechanism further highlights the advantage of self-assembled systems as the electron transfer efficiency between dye−catalyst pairs is much higher than for diffusional systems. This effect is fundamental to the high activity of these photocatalytic liposome systems.
Hence, beyond providing new insights into the photoinduced charge-transfer dynamics of membrane-bound species and the catalytic mechanism of CoP L , this work illustrates the power of combining time-resolved and in situ spectroscopic techniques to understand molecule-based systems. This work shows the potential of liposome-bound molecular systems for efficient photocatalysis, which can move beyond CO 2 reduction in future development.
Lipid (dry powder) DMPC and polycarbonate extrusion filters (pore size = 0.2 μm; diameter = 19 mm) were purchased from Merck. Lipid (dry powder) NaDSPE-PEG2K, DLPC, DPPC and the extruder set, containing two needles with a holder and heating block, were purchased from Avanti.
Physical Characterization. 1 H and 13 C NMR spectra were collected with a Bruker 400 MHz NMR spectrometer at room temperature. Chemical shifts for 1 H NMR spectra are referenced relative to residual protons in the deuterated solvent (Eurisotop). Elemental analyses were carried out by the Microanalysis Service of the Yusuf Hamied Department of Chemistry, University of Cambridge, using a Perkin-Elmer 240 Elemental Analyzer. High-resolution mass spectra were recorded using a Synapt G2-Si high-definition mass spectrometer. UV−vis spectra were collected using a Cary 60 UV−vis spectrometer. Attenuated total reflectance fourier-transform infrared spectra were recorded on a Nicolet iS50 spectrometer. Dynamic light scattering experiments were performed with a Zetasizer Nano ZS.
Preparation of Liposomes and Synthesis of Catalysts and Photosensitizer. Full details of the followed methodology can be found in the Experimental Section in the Supporting Information.
Characterization of Liposomes. Liposome samples were characterized via dynamic light scattering and by cryogenic transmission electron microscopy, which were used to confirm liposome size and analyze the fluidity of liposome samples containing molecular species.
Dynamic Light Scattering. The size distribution of the hydrodynamic diameter (Z ave ) and the polydispersity index were measured at 25°C by dynamic light scattering with a Zetasizer Nano-S from Malvern operating at 632.8 nm with a scattering angle of 173°.
Cryogenic Transmission Electron Microscopy (Cryo-TEM). Samples were analyzed by Cryo-TEM as described elsewhere. 48 In brief, samples were equilibrated at 25°C and high relative humidity within a climate chamber. A small drop of each sample was deposited on a carbon-sputtered copper grid covered with a perforated polymer film. Excess liquid was thereafter removed by blotting with a filter paper, leaving a thin film of the solution on the grid. The sample was vitrified in liquid ethane and transferred to a microscope, continuously kept below −160°C and protected against atmospheric conditions. Analyses were performed with a Zeiss Libra 120 transmission electron microscope (Carl Zeiss AG, Oberkochen, Germany) operating at 80 kV and in zero-loss bright-field mode. Digital images were recorded under low-dose conditions with a BioVision Pro-SM Slow Scan CCD camera (Proscan elektronische Systeme GmbH, Scheuring, Germany).
Journal of the American Chemical Society pubs.acs.org/JACS Article Photocatalysis. Before photocatalytic testing, the liposome or homogeneous reaction solution (3 mL) was purged for 20 min with CO 2 , or N 2 for control experiments, containing in both cases 2% methane as the internal standard for GC. After purging, the vials were kept in a water bath at 25°C and irradiated for 4 h using a Newport Oriel Xenon 150 W solar light simulator (100 mW cm −2 , AM1.5G) containing infrared water and ultraviolet (λ > 400 nm) filters. Each different photocatalytic experiment was performed in triplicate, unless otherwise stated. In the case of light intensity experiments, additional neutral density filters were used to achieve different light intensities (90, 50 and 20%).
Gaseous Product Analysis. The amount of produced CO and H 2 was analyzed by headspace gas analysis using a Shimadzu Tracera GC-2010 Plus with a barrier discharge ionization detector. The GC-2010 Plus was equipped with a ShinCarbon micro ST column (0.53 mm diameter) kept at 40°C using helium carrier gas. Aliquots of 50 or 100 μL of the headspace gas were removed from the sealed photocatalytic vials using a gastight syringe (Hamilton) for GC analysis at hourly time intervals. Data are presented as mean ± standard error of the mean and were calculated from a number of repeats of independent experiments. No formate was detected using 1 H NMR and ion chromatography. Photocatalytically generated methane was not detected, and this was confirmed by carrying out experiments with CO 2 gas without any internal standard CH 4 . Then, after photocatalysis, the headspace gas was analyzed using GC.
Isotopic Labeling Experiment. Photocatalysis experiments in 0.1 M NaH 2 PO 4 and 0.1 M NaHAsc aqueous solution with 13 CO 2 as the headspace gas were performed. After 3 h of simulated light irradiation, the vial headspace was transferred to an evacuated gas infrared cell (SpecAc, 10-cm path length, equipped with KBr windows) and a high-resolution transmission spectrum was collected with a Thermo Scientific Nicolet iS50 FT-IR spectrometer.
Quantum Yield Measurements. One-milliliter solutions containing DMPC (100 μM) liposomes made of RuPS L (10 μM) and CoP L (500 nM) were irradiated with monochromatic light (λ = 450 nm), using two different light intensities (I 1 = 5.55 and I 2 = 11.73 mW cm −2 ), produced with a solar simulator (LOT LSN 254) equipped with a monochromator (LOT MSH 300). Duplicate experiments were performed for each light intensity, and the averaged values of the produced μmol of CO were utilized to determine Φ CO using eq 1: where n CO is the moles of photogenerated CO gas, N A is the Avogadro constant in mol −1 , h is the Planck constant in J s, c is the speed of light in m s −1 , t irr is the irradiation time in s, λ is the monochromatic light wavelength in m, I is the light intensity in J s −1 m −2 , and A is the irradiation cross-section in m 2 . P is the probability of absorbing a photon by the photosensitizer, i.e., 1−10 −(Abs@454nm) , where due to the high scattering of the DMPC liposomes the absorbance used was calculated employing the bulk concentration of RuPS L (10 μM) and its molar attenuation coefficient (1.35 × 10 4 M −1 cm −1 ) in methanol. Steady-State Emission and Absorption Spectroscopy. Absorption spectra were recorded in 1.0 cm quartz cuvettes on a Cary 50 Bio spectrometer. Steady-state emission spectra were recorded in 1.0 cm quartz cuvettes on a Fluorolog 3 fluorimeter (Horiba) with double grating monochromators and a P928 PMT detector, and before measurements, all solutions were degassed with Ar.
Determination of the RuPS Quenching Constants. For dynamic (diffusional) quenching, the Stern−Volmer equation (eq 2) was applied: 49 where I 0 and I are emission intensities in the absence and presence of the quencher, while τ 0 and τ are emission lifetimes in the absence and presence of the quencher, respectively. K SV is the Stern−Volmer constant, and k q is the second-order rate constant for the quenching reaction.
For static quenching, where the emission intensity from the associated complex can be neglected, the following relation (eq 3) was used: 49 where K A is the association constant between the dye and quencher, and I 0 and I have the same meaning as in the previous equation. In the case of purely static quenching, the observed lifetime of the unquenched dyes is not affected (τ 0 = τ). Nanosecond Transient Absorption and Emission Measurements. For nanosecond transient absorption and emission measurements, optical excitation was performed by using the third harmonic output of a frequency-doubled Q-switched Nd:YAG laser combined with an OPO to generate 460 nm excitation pulses. For time-resolved spectra and kinetic traces on nano-to-microsecond time scales, a Quanta-Ray Pro series/OPO combination (Spectra-Physics) was used to give 460 nm, 8 mJ pulse −1 (in some cases, 20, 30, and 50 mJ pulse −1 ). The laser was coupled to a LP 920 detection system (Edinburgh Instruments) equipped with a pulsed XBO 450 W xenon Arc Lamp (Osram), which can provide the white light for probing. An iStar CCD camera (Andor Technology) and a LP920-K photomultiplier (PMT) detector connected to a Tektronix TDS 3052 500 MHz 5 GS/s oscilloscope were used for transient signal detection. Transient absorption and emission data were acquired using LP 900 software and processed using Origin 2018 software. For kinetic traces on milli-second time scales and above, a Quantel, Brilliant B laser with Opotek OPO was used to provide 460 nm, 15 mJ pulses. The probe light was single wavelength and provided using an un-pulsed 150 W Xe lamp in a flash photolysis spectrometer (Applied Photophysics LKS.60). Two monochromators were used to minimize sample excitation by probe light: the first monochromator was set to the desired detection wavelength before reaching the sample, and the second monochromator was placed after samples. The absorption difference of samples at specified wavelength can be monitored with a PMT Hamamatsu R928 detector and digitized using an Agilent Technologies Infinium digital oscilloscope (600 MHZ). Transient absorption data were acquired within the Applied Photophysics LKS software package. All transient absorption and emission measurements were carried out at room temperature, and a 1.0 cm path length quartz cell cuvette was used for the measurements, and before measurements, all solutions were degassed with Ar.
Fabrication of GCE|Catalyst. Before immobilizing the alkylated catalysts, the GCE surface (diameter = 3.0 mm; area = 0.09 cm 2 ) was cleaned by polishing using 0.015 μm alumina, rinsed with Milli-Q water, followed by sonication in Milli-Q water and acetone for 10 min each solvent, and dried with a N 2 stream. The alkylated catalysts were immobilized onto the GC electrodes via dropcasting a known concentration of the catalysts in methanol (MT L ) or acetone (MP L ), followed by air drying. The concentration of catalysts on the GCE, calculated based on the dropcast volume and concentration of the initial solution, was 1.15 nmol cm −2 .
Fabrication of FTO|CoP L . Before immobilizing CoP L , the FTO electrodes were sonicated in acetone and isopropanol for 10 min each and then dried in air overnight. CoP L was immobilized onto FTO by dropcasting 0.4 mL of a 0.2 mM 1:1 acetone/hexane solution of the catalyst and drying in air.
CV and SWV were used to characterize the catalysts in N 2 -or CO 2saturated 0.2 M TBAPF 6 DMF homogeneous solutions at room temperature. A custom-made two compartment H-cell with frit separating the compartments with a three-electrode configuration was employed with airtight compartments. The glassy carbon and Pt mesh were used as working and counter electrodes, respectively, and Ag/ AgNO 3 (10 mM) was used as the reference electrode. All experiments in DMF are referenced against the ferrocene redox couple [E(Fc 0/+ ) = +0.07 V vs Ag/AgNO 3 (10 mM)].
Journal of the American Chemical Society pubs.acs.org/JACS Article Chronoamperometry measurements of GCE|catalysts and SWV and chronoamperometry measurements of FTO|CoP L were performed in a custom-made three-neck one-compartment cell. A threeelectrode configuration was employed, using the GCE|catalyst or FTO|CoP L as the working electrode, Pt mesh as the counter electrode, and Ag/AgCl (KCl sat ) as the reference electrode (BASi RE-6). The potentials were converted from Ag/AgCl (KCl sat ) to the standard hydrogen electrode (SHE) by adding +0.199 V. All experiments carried out in aqueous conditions were reported against SHE. The electrolyte solution was 0.1 M NaHCO 3 (aq.) (15 mL) and was purged with N 2 or CO 2 for 30 min to remove atmospheric O 2 . The pH of the N 2 -and CO 2 -saturated 0.1 M NaHCO 3 was 8.0 and 6.7, respectively. All chronoamperometry experiments were performed for 4 h, and the applied potential was −1.1 V vs Ag/AgCl (KCl sat ), i.e., −0.9 V vs SHE, without iR correction. All measurements were performed at room temperature as triplicate for each catalyst, and data are presented as mean ± standard error of the mean. The mean values and standard errors of the mean were calculated from the number of repeats of independent experiments.
In Situ UV−vis−NIR Spectroelectrochemistry. Measurements were conducted in a single-compartment airtight electrochemical cell using N 2 -or CO 2 -saturated 0.1 M NaHCO 3 , and a three-electrode configuration was employed. FTO|CoP L was used as the working electrode, Pt mesh as the counter electrode, and Ag/AgCl (KCl sat ) as the reference electrode (BASi RE-6). For stepwise chronoamperometry (+0.7 V to −0.9 V vs SHE), the working electrode was kept at each potential for 1 min and the UV−vis−NIR spectra were recorded on an Agilent Cary 60 spectrophotometer using Cary WinUV scanning software. Applied potentials were +0.7, +0. In Situ Resonance Raman Spectroelectrochemistry. Raman spectra were obtained using a Renishaw inVia spectrometer. Excitation at 785 nm and collection were via a 20× 0.45 NA objective. Typical laser power was 0.4 mW with 60 s exposure time. SEC experiments were performed using an Autolab PGSTAT204 in a custom-built 3D printed cell using FTO|CoP L as the working electrode, leakless Ag/AgCl as the reference electrode (Green Leaf Scientific), and Pt mesh as the counter electrode. During chronoamperometry, 1 min was allowed at each applied potential step (i.e., +0.7, −0.1, −0.3, −0.5, −0.7, and −0.9 V vs SHE), before spectra were recorded to allow the cell to equilibrate. Spectral analysis was performed with a custom python script. Approximately 10 spectra were recorded per potential on different sample areas, with averaged spectra used for further analysis. Spectra were background-subtracted using a 4 th order polynomial estimation method. Difference spectra were calculated from the difference of each spectrum with the first, recorded at +0.7 V vs SHE, using both raw and backgroundsubtracted spectra to ensure that no processing artifacts are introduced by background subtraction. Relative intensity versus potential was calculated as follows. First, characteristic modes for the oxidized and reduced species were selected and confirmed via comparison to DFT calculations. Next, the mode area at each potential, (V), is obtained by integrating spectral intensity. Relative intensity is then calculated using eq 5: Computational Details. DFT calculations were performed with Gaussian09 (revision D1). 50 Geometry optimization, vibrational analysis, and Raman activities were calculated with a 6−31 + G* 51,52 basis set for C, H, O, and N and the Stuttgart/Dresden effective core potential (SDD) 53,54 for Co, Ni, Fe, and Ru. All the calculations were performed using the uB3LYP 55 functional including Grimmes D3 dispersion correction. 56 Single-point energy calculations were performed with a 6-311++G(3df,3pd) 57,58 basis set for C, H, O, and N and the SDD for Co, Ni, Fe, and Ru. Free energies were calculated from single-point energy calculations and free energy corrections obtained from geometry optimization and vibrational frequency calculation, and a correction to a 1 M standard was applied (1.9 kcal mol −1 ). Solvent effects for the geometry optimization and single-point calculations were modeled with a PCM solvation model with the dielectric constant of H 2 O (78.4). 59 Various spin states of the intermediates were calculated, and the most stable one was chosen. Electron transfer energies were referenced by the calculated [Ru(bipy) 3 ] 2+ /[Ru(bipy) 3 ] 1+ redox cycle, and proton transfer energies were calculated from the free energy of a free proton in H 2 O (−272.2 kcal mol −1 ). 60,61 Theoretical Raman spectra were simulated based on the calculated Raman activities for a corresponding frequency according to eq 6: The Supporting Information is available free of charge at https://pubs.acs.org/doi/10.1021/jacs.2c01725. Additional experimental details for the synthesis of the described ligands and metal complexes (including NMR, MS, UV−vis, and IR data), preparation of liposomes, electrochemistry data of all catalysts in organic media and on electrodes, cryogenic transmission electron microscopy of liposomes, photocatalysis results, photoinduced charge-transfer dynamic investigations, UV− vis−NIR and resonance Raman spectroelectrochemistry results for CoP L on FTO, and DFT-calculated Raman spectra, and computed structures (PDF) XYZ atomic coordinates (ZIP)